200 West 58th Street

Watch “The Paterno Family: Chronicling a New York Real Estate Legacy” video on YouTube

Read ‘The Paterno Brothers & Their Manhattan Apartment Houses‘ Look Book

This building is featured in the video The Paterno Monograms: Art of Personalizing Apartment Buildings

1912 7th Avenue and 58th Street
aka 200 West 58th Street

1912
537
$300,000.00
7TH [Seventh] AV, s w cor 58th st 12-sty apartment house, 100.5˙90
OWNER / OWNER ADDRESS
(o) Paterno Const. Co / (o) 440 Riverside Drive COMMENTS
ARCHITECT / ARCHITECT ADDRESS
(a) G. Ajello / (a) 1 West 34th st (source)

Mentioned here: Faith in New York Property • Interview with Dr. Charles V. Paterno • 1926

source
source
New-York tribune. [volume], March 01, 1913, Page 16, Image 16
New-York tribune. [volume], June 14, 1914, Page 7, Image 39
The sun. [volume], November 02, 1913, FIFTH SECTION, Image 51
The sun. [volume], June 08, 1913, THIRD SECTION, Page 6, Image 28
New-York tribune. [volume], July 07, 1912, Page 2, Image 46
New-York tribune. [volume], June 20, 1914, Page 16, Image 16
New-York tribune. [volume], May 07, 1914, Page 16, Image 16
The sun. [volume], May 12, 1914, Page 16, Image 16
source
Photo by mjwoo44 for Carla Golden 2021
Photo by mjwoo44 for Carla Golden 2021
Photo by mjwoo44 for Carla Golden 2021
Photo by mjwoo44 for Carla Golden 2021
Photo by mjwoo44 for Carla Golden 2021
Photo by mjwoo44 for Carla Golden 2021
Photo by mjwoo44 for Carla Golden 2021
Photo by mjwoo44 for Carla Golden 2021
New – York Tribune (1911-1922); Jun 9, 1912; pg. C4
New – York Tribune (1911-1922); Jun 20, 1914; pg. 16
New – York Tribune (1911-1922); Jun 14, 1914; pg. C7 – Part 1
New – York Tribune (1911-1922); Jun 14, 1914; pg. C7 – Part 2
source
UNCONFIRMED: Matthew X. Kiernan
Paterno Apartments, Midtown

Entrance Rondelle
Paterno Apartments (1912–13)
Architect: Gaetan Ajello
200 W. 58th St.
Midtown, New York

Uploaded on July 5, 2015 Taken on July 4, 2015
 
Built by the Paterno Construction Company of real estate developers Charles and Joseph Paterno: a “P” appears in a cartouche over the front entrance. Charles V. Paterno (1876–1946) built a castle at 185th Street and Riverside Drive in 1909, but he maintained an apartment here and owned a Packard in 1914.
 
Playright George S. Kaufman (1889¬–1961) lived here from 1921 to 1929. While living here, he wrote Dulcy (1921), Merton of the Movies (1922), Helen of Troy, New York (1923), Beggar on Horseback (1924), The Butter and Egg Man (1925), The Cocoanuts (1925), The Royal Family (1927), The Front Page (1928), Animal Crackers (1928), and Strike Up the Band (1930).
 
David Johansen (aka Buster Poindexter, b. 1950) lived here in the 1980s.
 
© Matthew X. Kiernan
NYBAI15-6452 (source)